Thursday, October 3, 2013

Breaking News: Plane Crashes at Lagos Airport


Reports reaching us indicate that an Akure-bound chartered Associated Aeroplane has crashed at the Lagos airport near the toll gate.
Fire service officials were seen evacuating the occupants of the plane and an unconfirmed report from LASUTH says 20 bodies have been brought it unconscious.
It is also said that the aircraft was carrying the corpse of late ex-Ondo state governor Olusegun Agagu. 
More details later

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Tinubu Writes Yobe Gov An Emotional Letter Over School Attack


Former Lagos State Governor and leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has sympathised with Governor Ibrahim Gaidam of Yobe State over Sunday’s murder of 41 students of the College of Agriculture in Gujba by suspected Boko Haram militants.
In an emotional letter sent to the governor, Tinubu said he was moved to “deep sorrow and anguish indignation” upon hearing the news of the tragedy. He said the wanton murder of the students “jars the conscience and reminds us of the sinister nature of the enemy our nation now faces”.
In one of the most horrific attacks carried out on defenseless people by the Islamic militants, gunmen on Sunday invaded the hostels at the school and shot dead more than 40 students while they were sleeping. The attackers also set the school buildings on fire as they retreated after the attack.
Tinubu wrote: “ I dare not ply you with words of false comfort and consolation for there is no genuine solace to be had at a moment like this. Evil crept through the darkness to snatch the lives of young people who were just entering the fullness of life. “Their purported crime was that they wanted to improve their lives and help the nation; for this, they should be commended. Instead, their lives were snuffed short,” the APC leader said.
Tinubu also assured the governor that though the grief is heavy, Nigerians share in the tragedy of this moment. “ You are the father of all residents in your state, thus you carry the heavy grief of a father; but you don’t carry this grief alone; all Nigerians grief with you. Those taken are our children too.”
The former governor also urged Gaidam and the people of Yobe State never to bow to the intimidation of the attackers but overcome this tragedy with determination and persistence.
Tinubu told Gaidam: “You must look beyond the death and spilled blood of these innocent children. In times like these, it is easy to give up and retreat into the shadows these evil forces have created. Yet we must be of good courage, we must forge ahead with our best plans and preparations for the people.”
The APC leader also warned of the dire consequences of giving in to terror. He urged the governor to remain steadfast in providing quality education, enlightenment and progress for the people describing the attack as a contest for the soul of the state and the nation.
“This is a contest for the soul of the state and the nation; we dare not lose it. These murderers seek to shutter the educational system in your state. Should they accomplish this, they will only attack another institution, then another, until all are flattened,” he said.

Tinubu called on the Federal Government and the law enforcement agencies to work closely with the state government to devise a strategy that better protects targeted institutions saying with the latest attack, it is now clear the acts of terror is not directed at a particular religion but to all Nigerians.While offering his assistance to Gaidam, Tinubu reiterated his commitment to standing by the people.
He said: “I want you to know that I stand by you, if there is anything I can do to help overcome this terrible moment, please call on me. You are my brother and I will come to help as a man does when his brother is in need.”

Media Chat: The 5 Lies Of Jonathan


Efforts made by President Goodluck Jonathan to shield some obvious truths during the fifth Media Chat held Sunday night on national television, have been exposed by P.M.NEWS painstaking investigation.
Contrary to the President’s claim in the televised media chat that prior to the emergence of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, as the ruling party at the centre in 1999, there was no mobile phone, the truth, according to P.M. NEWS finding, is that mobile cellular services made their debut in Nigeria in 1993 with a “national” service operated by NITEL and a smaller Lagos service operated by Mobile Telecommunications Services (MTS).
The two companies, with a joint subscriber base of 12, 500, offered voice services over an analogue E-TACS network, as well as basic value-added services such as voicemail and paging, from three switches (in Lagos, Enugu, and Abuja).
Also, in 1995, MTS closed its operations due to failure to pay interconnection charges to NITEL. M-Tel subsequently emerged as Nitel’s mobile service provider. NITEL introduced the 090—phonelines. This was, however, analogue, very expensive and was reserved for the very few. It indeed was a status symbol, but it had limited coverage.
Furthermore, Multi-Links, a private limited liability company was incorporated in Nigeria in 1994 to provide telecommunication services. It only got “a Unified Access Service Licence with an initial 10 years validity and with an option to renew for a further five years to enable it further expand its services and provide a wide ranging bouquet of services covering Digital mobile fixed telephony, ISP, VAS and payphone, Full international gateway and National long distance services,” on 6 November, 2006, from the Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC.
Prior to its expansion, it already introduced the 01- 775-lines into the market.
President Jonathan further claimed that since the emergence of the PDP, the country has witnessed improved standard of living. Surprisingly or maybe in the attempt to cover up the party’s failure at the federal level, he failed to state that many of the statistics churned out yearly do not correctly reflect the true prevailing situation in the country.
Last year, for instance, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) raised an alarm over an increase in the country’s poverty rate. The
Statistician-General of Nigeria, Yemi Kale, presented a study report indicating that poverty had risen from 54 percent among Nigeria’s population in 2004 to 69 percent in 2010, or about 112 million Nigerians, a huge figure when compared with Nigeria’s estimated population of 163 million in 2010.

Kale further said estimates show Nigerians may have gotten poorer in 2011.
Again, this year, the Statistician-General put the current rate of unemployment in Nigeria at 23.9 per cent even though it is believed to be higher.
The United Nations has also said that with 60,000 Nigerian children infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) last year, the country has the highest number of children with the virus in the world.
Jonathan also claimed that the Federal Government had only been assisting the striking lecturers of Nigerian universities in terms of payment of arrears as, according to him, the universities are supposed to be self sustaining, getting their pay from their internally generated revenue.
But P.M. NEWS findings have shown that his claim is false as it is not in conformity with the 2009 agreement the union reached with the Federal Government. According to the details of the report released by an implementation committee in November 2012, and obtained by P.M. NEWS, there was nothing to indicate that allowances or even salaries would be paid the lecturers through their internally generated revenue.
The report even made provision for grants for the lecturers to enable them attain more professional qualifications and degrees. The report was signed by both parties from the government and ASUU.
Many Nigerians this morning further slammed the President for mentioning that the ASUU strike was political.
According to them, the statement is unpresidential since the union has a justifiable reason for embarking on the industrial action.
Again, another obvious lie the President told Nigerians was that he had not declared his ambition to contest for the presidency in 2015.

He also denied seeing any of his billboards campaigning for his election, stressing that it was illegal to declare since the electoral laws of the country had not permitted it. Nigerians have not forgotten the recent campaigns by Dame Patience, the President’s wife, both in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital and the recent Abuja rally which brought thousands of PDP women together.
Apart from this, the President’s body language has shown his desperate interest in a second term in office. His loyalists and handlers have also, several times, given Nigerians the reason to believe that Jonathan is interested in contesting in 2015.

Analysts also believe that his ambition is the reason for the crises that have engulfed the PDP and torn the party into two.
President Jonathan claimed that his administration had fought corruption and that it is not even a major problem in the country or a major consideration for investors who want to do business in the country. In contrast to this claim, however, Nigerians and the international community have always lamented the high evel of corruption, especially in recent times and the inability of the government to check it.
There has also been a complaint that the rate of oil theft has never been as widespread and as frequent as it is now. This is even as the President has awarded contracts for the monitoring of the country’s waterways.
The secrecy with which the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, operates has also been a major point in the criticism of the present administration regarding the huge fraud being perpetrated in the petroleum industry.
At the last count, Transparency International rated Nigeria the 8th most corrupt nation on earth. This was in July this year, when it released the 2013 Global Corruption Barometer, which grouped Nigeria along with Zambia, Paraguay, Venezuela, Mexico, Russia, Zimbabwe, Liberia and Mongolia as the leading corrupt nations in the world.
Most informed analyses have always singled out corruption as the fundamental problem inhibiting Nigeria’s march to progress. President Jonathan’s comment will thus be deemed an absurdity.
PM News

Bigmanism in Nigeria

Several years ago, at a conference on Coastal Piracy in Nigeria’s Territorial Waters, I admonished a senior member of the Nigeria Customs and Immigrations Department that the Customs was the most corrupt sector of the Nigerian public service.
As a result, the Customs receive by far the largest number of job-applicants in the entire service.  The reason, I maintained, was because it is widely understood that Customs officials are Nigeria’s richest public-servants, given the fact that they are well-positioned to extort and receive bribes.
Big-man lawlessness:  The unfortunate Customs official at whom my reprimand was directed was not particularly offended.  Rather, he observed solemnly that the Customs receive mixed signals from Nigerian officialdom.  These indicate that laws are to be honoured more in the breach than in the observance.  Therefore, Customs officials have few qualms about being corrupt when, daily, they observe first-hand the corrupt practices of the powers-that-be
He noted that, on the one hand, the government issues a directive stating that a certain item is banned, or is to attract a certain amount of duty.  However, on the other hand, some “big-man” in the same government contradicts that very directive by giving instructions to Customs officials that Mr. So-and-So should be allowed in with 53 suitcases of the same banned item, or is to be exempted from duty payment.
Inevitably, Customs officials recognise that even members of the government are not interested in promoting their own laws.  So why should they, as lowly officials, be expected to be more Catholic than the Pope?
The same logic can be applied to the high propensity towards armed robbery in Nigeria.  Why should lowly paupers not resort to grand larceny for the sake of enjoying the “high life” when, day-in day-out, big-men steal millions and billions of public money with strokes of the pen and go unpunished?
Indeed, why should a Lawrence Anini be arrested and prosecuted for robbing an Agbor Bank of N50,000, when Chief Big-man, in the form of an Inspector-General of Police, is allowed to go virtually scot-free despite stealing a whopping N17 billion of public funds?
Nation of big-men:  Bigmanism is a chronic national malaise in Nigeria.  It is a disease whereby members of a highly visible segment of society are paraded as higher breeds beyond the pale of the law.  These big-men flout all conventions and they break all the rules.  In Nigeria, bigmanism is the key that opens all doors.  You are either a big man or you are not.  If you are, the world is your oyster.  If you are not, you are the scum of the earth.  In order to protect your rights, you will need to secure the good offices of a big-man.
The influence of the big-man in Nigerian society is without all bounds.  To date, we have yet to define any areas of merit or excellence immune to the nepotistic influence of our big-men.  If, for example, a man obtains a first-class honours degree in Economics and a Masters in Business Administration from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, and subsequently secures employment at First Bank in Lagos, people would still want to know how he got the job.
Yes, he obtained a first-class degree in the relevant field alright but, tell me: is the Managing Director of First Bank his uncle?  Did one Chief Big-man push the right buttons for him?
Cheating the small-man:  Bigmanism is also invaluable in Nigeria as a means of protecting your rights.  Some years back, Yinka, a friend of mine, was arrested for obstructing traffic, when all he did was move out of the way for an ambulance with blaring sirens.
He was fined N7,500  and also charged N1,500 for car radio license.  When he asked the arresting officer if he could see any radio in his car, he just smiled at him then put a sticker on his windscreen stating that he had paid for his non-existent car-radio.
When Yinka got home, he felt so cheated.  He knew what happened to him was nothing but daylight robbery.  On reflection, he concluded that the reason he was robbed so blatantly was because he was a “Nobody.”  He was driving an old ramshackle car which did not even have a radio.  He was scruffily-dressed and was subdued throughout his ordeal.  So he decided to fight back.  He understood that, in order to do this effectively, he had to become “Somebody.”
Big-man’s redemption:  So the next day, he went back to the offending office.  But this time, he went as a big-man.  He put on a pompous suit-and-tie.  He went in a posh saloon car.  He did not drive himself; he went chauffeur-driven.
Immediately he got out of his car, a gentleman accosted him and greeted him lavishly.  “I seem to know you from somewhere,” he said.  He stared at him for a moment then asked: “Did you use to own a business at Ikoyi Hotel?”  “Yes,” he replied.  “That’s right,” he said, “my office was at Glover.  What can I do for you, Sir?  My name is Onikoyi and I am in charge here.”
“You are the man I have come to see,” Yinka replied.  “Yesterday, one of your men arrested and fined me N7,500  for making way for an ambulance.  On top of that, he charged me N1,500 for car radio license.  When I protested that I did not have a car radio, he simply laughed at me.”
Arrogant oppressor
Mr. Onikoyi asked: “Can you recognise the man involved if you see him again?”  “Yes, I can,” he replied. At which point, he directed that all his subordinates should line up for Yinka’s inspection.  But before they could do that, his nemesis of the day before walked in.  “This is the man,” Yinka declared.
Mr. Onikoyi did not waste any time with him.  “That is the end of your job here,” he said.  This man, who had been Yinka’s arrogant oppressor the day before, now started rolling on the ground at his feet, begging for his job.  Mr. Onikoyi said to him: “Look at you, useless man.”  Then he turned to Yinka: “The man has two wives!”  Yinka’s N7,500 fine was refunded to him.  Unfortunately, his radio license fee could not be refunded for administrative reasons.
Yinka could not confirm if the man was actually sacked in the end.  All he knows is that he prevailed on that occasion by becoming a “big man.”  That is how the system works in Nigeria.  If you are not a big-man, you are likely to be cheated with impunity.
A few weeks later, Yinka was arrested yet again, in the same vicinity.  This time, the traffic warden stopped him, and then told him to proceed.  But when he did, he arrested him, insisting he only told the car in front of him to go.  When he refused to play ball by offering a quick bribe, he jumped into the front-seat with him and took him to the same office.
As Yinka got out of the car on reaching there, he was immediately surrounded by a number of the arresting officer’s colleagues.  “What are you doing here, Sir,” they enquired anxiously.  Before he could answer, they insisted he must leave at once.  “There’s no problem, Sir, no problem at all,” they chorused, determined that he should not, under any circumstances, see Mr. Onikoyi.  That was apparently the last of his problems with them.  I believe he must have been classified thereafter in their office as an untouchable big-man.
Former-big-men:  Nigeria is not only the country with the largest Black population in the world, it is also, in all probability, the country with the largest number of big-men.  This number is swelled by the large retinue of ex-public functionaries, fondly referred to in some circles as “ex-this: ex-that.”
The high turnover of government in Nigeria has brought many Nigerians into high public office, only to turn them out soon afterwards.  High government turnover itself is compounded by administrative devolution.  There are now 36 states, with people still clamoring for more.  And then there is township bigmanism, represented by the obas, the emirs and the plethora of chiefs.
There are so many big men in Nigeria that the British government was constrained to send to Nigeria a list of the few public functionaries they recognise as big-men.  Those big-men not on the list should not expect diplomatic protocols when visiting Britain.
Former public functionaries
Part of the problem here is that Nigeria’s former public functionaries continue to act as big-men, and expect to continue to be treated as big-men, even after they are out of office.  What this means, in effect, is that the more the turnover of government, the more the big-men there are to flout the law.
The more states we have; the more public officers we have, the more our streets, offices, banks and airports are littered with big-men, former big-men and “acting” big men, always at the ready to ask: “Do you know who I am?”
And then there is yet that other category: those Nigerians who are big-men by extension.  They are the brothers and sisters and uncles and aunties of the big-men.
These people are likely to ask the bureaucrat or the law-enforcement agent whether he knows that so-and-so is their relative.  This approach works, for the simple reason that superior authorities are not inclined to back up their subordinates who deny special privileges either to big-men or their relations.  In fact, denial of those privileges is one of the surest ways of losing your job.
Future big-men:  So, after listening to the simple rationalisations of the Customs official, I came to the conclusion that, while most young graduates may wish to become Customs officials, most Nigerians have one burning ambition: to become big-men.  Very soon, if you were to ask a Nigerian boy of five years old what he would like to be when he grows up, don’t be surprised if he replies: “I want to be a big-man.”

Vanguard

Power Not Substitute For Blood, Gumi Warns Jonathan


Sheik Ahmad Abubakar Gumi today in his comment marking Nigeria’s 53rd independence anniversary warned President Goodluck Jonathan that power is not a substitute for blood.
He also said that the best Jonathan can do in 2015 is to organize free and fair election and go in peace, rather than be deceive by power mongers at all cost.

Gumi in a statement said, “Today Tuesday is another milestone in the history of the nation Nigeria. The mere survival of Nigeria as a unified entity is the only successful story in the 53 years of its independence. Like Boko Haram, Nigeria can only boast of its success on its survival. We see despite heavy fatalities and injuries of thousands of people and the grounded economic life of the north east, the purported Boko Haram leader can only boast on his ability to prove he is still alive. Just like Boko Haram, Nigeria is real but unrealistic, naïve and self-annihilative. Why? Just because those that lead the two phenomena are dehumanized of all human sensibilities. They trade blood for power!

According to the fearless cleric, Jonathan is economical with truth regarding security issues, “Two years ago, regarding the 1st of October 2010 Abuja bombing that killed 12 innocent Nigerians, carried out by the terrorist organization M.E.N.D, President Jonathan exonerated them and tried to castigate the northern politicians inferring to IBB. A new strategy never known in Nigerian politics came in to play i.e. by calling a dog a bad name to hang it. Then IBB was foreseen as the most formidable obstacle to deny Goodluck power. They forgot IBB left the power to save Nigerian blood. This the best deed of IBB Nigerians should not betray.Yes, from the onset, Mr. Goodluck was apparently in a struggle to grab power and to cling to power even if that is at the cost of innocent Nigerian lives. Well it turned out that his people were the culprits.”

He continued that “after his ascension to power and the affect of strategic replacements in the Nigerian security apparatus that favored the South South and South East regions, the ‘Boko Haram’ bombings became incessant, powerful and more sophisticated. Bombings in Sokoto, Daura, Kano, Kaduna, Zaria, Maiduguri, Abuja, Damaturu, Bauchi, etc. in fact the whole northern region was virtually on fire. ‘Boko Haram’ a ragtag group of peasant al-majiris were then abruptly well-equipped to carry out highly sophisticated military like -clandestine operations. It is to insinuate that they were triggered as a reaction of the northern region to reject Jonathan’s rule. This is the calling a dog a bad name to hang him strategy again. This time not against individuals but a whole region and religion. Then Azazi and Yakowa died abruptly. The bombings also suddenly abated to a halt.”

Gumi, who also argued that recent killings are new tactics, said, “gradually a new strategy sets in. Massive killings of civilians in villages, schools and road sides by unidentified people or recently workers squatting in uncompleted buildings by security agents. All happening in states supposed to be either under state of emergencies or the capital city where security alert is at the optimum. Gen. Shuwa was gunned down and murdered under the very eyes of his army guards that didn’t react. And no military panel to investigate the killing of such a national hero that fought to keep Nigeria one was officiated. And you dare say the military now is demoralized and also paralyzed by its own mechanism. In brief, these killings in Nigeria from the 1st October 2010 to date are largely a script play and a plot unfolding. In it, even some of the active accomplices like the naïve almajiris are not aware they are pawns. “In Nigeria today nobody is safe. Anybody can be attacked and killed, or framed up and arrested.

You see or hear of law and order is only in books and the compromised newspapers and media. Journalism is dead, justice in the court of law is absent, intellectuals are neutralized, and the populace is largely left poor and uneducated. Mr. Jonathan has only one option left for him. Let him conduct a free and fair election in 2015. From PDP primary elections to the national elections. Let him not be deceived by those wolves that want to push him to his expiration for their corrupt lifestyles. Mr. Jonathan should know that power is no substitute for blood i.e. you cannot spill other people’s blood to stay in power and remain flourishing. You should ask Assad about that. You can call Sisi in Egypt and ask him about that. The psycho-trauma is enough to finish one’s life. “Please Mr. Jonathan, if Nigerians don’t want you please go in peace.

My advice to Nigerians is that the struggle in Nigeria is wrongly termed religious or ethnic. It is all about a clique who wants to monopolize money and power. The day Nigerians reclaim their government, military and resources, that day they will realized that boko haram, MEND, OPC and also the so called ‘influential’ religious organizations are all hijacked for the same goal by this clique to perpetuate the status quo. As for Islam, I can speak for. Islam calls for peaceful co-existence, progress, mercy and compassion on all humanity. "And We have not sent you but as a mercy to the world." Q21/107

Sahara Reporters

Tinubu’s airline bounces back, resumes flight operations - NewsExpress



More than a year after it suspended flight operations, First Nation Airlines owned by former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has bounced back. The airlines resumed operations on Monday, September 30.

“The first flight of the airline took off to Abuja from the Murtala Muhammed Airport Two (MMA2), Lagos about 11.15am on one of its new Airbus’ A319 aircraft,” says a report in The Nation, also owned by Tinubu.

“The passengers,” according to the report, “were welcomed with smiles by the elated members of staff of the airline, who assured them that the state-of-the-art aircraft would provide alternative and better flying experience for those who want to fly in them.

“Many of the Abuja-bound passengers who were aware that the airline would resume flight operations yesterday had either booked their tickets online or had arrived at MMA2 very early in the morning to procure their tickets.”

News Express had on October 26 last year exclusively reported the collapse of First Nation Airlines in a story entitled “Exclusive: Tinubu’s airline collapses”. According to that story, “Nigeria’s latest airlines, First Nation, has collapsed less than a year after it began operations. Owned by former Lagos State governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, First Nation started operations early last November but ran into trouble shortly thereafter.”

The story quoted an authoritative source close to First Nation as saying: “The staff who didn’t leave on their own were asked to go on compulsory leave; so, in effect, there are no more operations.”

News Express also reported that the airlines had also lost its fleet of three A320s to the lessor, Aviation Capital Group.

It quoted the blog Aviation in Nigeria as saying: “The aircraft (5N-FNA, -FNB and -FNC) are likely repossessed; they were re-registered to the US FAA register as N409AG, N466AG and N997AG earlier this month. First Nation Airways suspended its flight operations in June 2012, and ferried at least two A320s to Istanbul for maintenance.”

Nigeria Will Not Break Up in 2014 or 2015- Clerics Tells Biafra, Oduduwa, Ogoni Separatists


Clergymen from different  denominations under the aegis of Nigeria Prayer Project gathered  at the National Christian Centre, Abuja on the eve of Nigeria’s 53rd independence day celebrations and eve of 100  years of the nation’s forced amalgamation, to declare the counsel of God that Nigeria will not break up either in 2014 or 2015 as predicted.

The occasion was a night vigil to usher the nation into its centenary year and prophetically declare the counsel of God concerning Nigeria. The clerics unanimously agreed that the proponents of break-up of Nigeria will fail as the nation is yet to fulfill its prophetic agenda.
In the sermon delivered at the occasion, the President of Gethsemane Prayer Ministry, Ibadan, Dr Moses Aransiola declared that “the strength of Nigeria is in its present geographical make up and unity.” According to the cleric BIG UNITED Nigeria is better than a little Odua Republic. a little Biafra Republic, a little Ogoni Republic, or a little Arewa Republic”. Dr Aransiola stated further that what Nigeria needed at the moment is “a united spirit like the United States of America and United Kingdom. Such an entity can become an African Super Power like Britain and America” 

Declaring Gods counsel about Nigeria, Dr Aransiola said that God has been making known his prophetic agenda for Nigeria to his servants and prophets for many years now at different gatherings both within and outside Nigeria. Some foreigners who received prophetic words for Nigeria include late Pa S.G. Elton (England). Evangelist Reinhard Bonnke (Germany), Prophetess Cindy Jacobs (America), Robert liardon and Rohan Smith (Americans) among others.

According to him, some of Gods prophetic declarations for Nigeria include;

1. Nigeria is my battle axe and weapon of war

2. Out of this nation shall men and women arise who will be my chosen vessels to bring millions to me

3. Nigeria shall fulfill my counsel for the black race, the race that has been despised and enslaved.

4. I will visit and purify my church in Nigeria so that she may fulfill my purpose

5. I will raise Daniels and Josephs who will know how to build, plant, preserve and conserve Nigeria.

6. Son of Man say unto Nigeria and Nigerians ; though you have passed through the valleys of the shadow of death and shall yet pass through the valley of the shadow of death, thus saith the Lord, you shall not die but you shall live.

He described break-up proponents as fatalists and posited that Christianity is about recovery and redemption and not destruction.

Pastor Offodile Nzimiro, the new vision co-ordinator of Throne Room Ministries, Kafanchan, who represented Emmanuel Kure, led the congregation in the blowing of the chauffeur of liberation. Seven chauffeur was blown seven times signifying liberation of the nation while the covenant of salt and water was enacted for the nation signifying that anything that has held the nation backward for ninety nine years shall be healed by the mystery of salt and water according to how Prophet Elisha healed the land of destruction at the urging of the prophets. 

The service started by 7pm and ended around 1.30 am but between the hours of 11.55-12.55 an interval of ten minutes, there was unusual divine presence inside the auditorium and the expectant congregation went into wild jubilation before the cloud lifted.

Earlier during the service the address of Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor on the state of the nation was read on his behalf. Pastor Austin Ukachi, Dr Emeka Nwankpa and Former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon prayed for the nation.

Addressing news men after the occasion Apostle Martins Atanda of Zion World Prayer and Missions, Sokoto asked clergymen to shun corruption and lead in the move to emancipate Nigeria.  Rev Obinna Akukwe, a human rights activist, observed that the unusual  presence of God just before and after midnight at the event is a sign that God has not abandoned Nigeria and that divinity has  come to either bless, judge or curse the enemies of Nigeria and asked politicians and looters to beware of judgement ..

In a similar vein the Senior Pastor of Dunamis International Gospel Centre, Abuja, Paul Enenche has decried the decay in the university educational system in Nigeria. Speaking at the October 1st service, Enenche told the congregation that the decay is such that Ghanaian Medical Graduates can practice in Europe without further examinations while their Nigerian counterparts have to write examinations and rigorous tests before being certified to practice overseas. He led the congregation to bind the spirits plaguing the education sector and also prayed for the strengthening of the naira, lamenting that the once prestigious national currency has been grossly devalued.